“Do not fret because of evil men
or be envious of those who
do wrong. . .”
The only fret I have is whether or not I do enough
frettin’.
Take my mother, for instance—she’s sure that the world is
slowly sinking toward a moral morass, some iniquitous black hole that will
eventually suck most all of us in, until, gloriously, the Lord, in glory, comes
again. She frets about the life’s seamy
appearances, and her continual frettin’ affects her mood.
She’s old enough to deserve my respect no matter what her
views or how much she frets; besides, she’s my mother. But I’m not taken by the way she flirts with such
obsessions because I don’t think she should spend the last years of her life
frettin’.
We live in strange times.
I don’t think it’s possible to locate an era in the last decade or so
when spirituality in general and Christianity in particular was ever quite so
popular. The vast majority of Americans,
unlike citizens of any other nation, claim to believe in God. A significant majority go to worship frequently. Crime is down, as is drug use, as is teen-age
pregnancy. Even abortion rates are lower
than they were.
On the campus where I teach, just about every student wears
a t-shirt with a Bible verse. Students
flock to praise-n-worship gatherings voluntarily and exude a piety that existed
only among the most devout just twenty years ago. Lots of parents tell me their kids are far
more spiritually mature at 18 than they were at that age.
Politically, the U. S. government is in the hands of Republicans,
my mother’s party. Many politicos and
pundits claim the last Presidential election was a wake-up call to many opinion-leaders
who never took Christians seriously.
Most major newspapers now concede that for too long they didn’t have a
clue about what was going on in the hearts and heads of an huge segment of
their own readership—American evangelicals.
It’s difficult to argue, I think, that we’re all going to
hell in a handbasket, although sometimes I think my mother would like to think
so. Specifically, what troubles her is
that this Christian nation is becoming secular, forbidding prayer and
tolerating abortion, tossing the Ten Commandments and, in its place
establishing, “political correctness.”
I think she’s frettin’ way too much. She thinks I’m worse—liberal.
When Black Sunday came to the Great Plains, when clouds of
dust arose from recently plowed Oklahoma land and swept all the way up into
South Dakota like a murky blizzard, lots of good people presumed the world was
at end. Not long ago, a woman told me
that she had a childhood memory of looking up at the preacher in the little
country church she attended and, on Black Sunday, seeing only the preacher’s
white collar.
When things got dark, good people thought we’d finally come
to end times. It’s understandable, but
it didn’t happen. Most believers I know plot
out the trajectory of our lives in the same direction—things are just getting
worse and worse.
Maybe not. But then,
as I said, maybe I just don’t fret like she does. Maybe I will in just a few years.
But I know this—both Mom and I can take heart from verse one
of Psalm 37, which says, in a nutshell, “don’t do that.” The enemy—whoever they are—aren’t worth my
time or anxiety, nor are they worth hers.
Next week I’ll quote that verse to her. Maybe it will help.
Probably not. She’ll probably still think I’m a liberal.
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